The Water Takes Many Forms

Read these weekly reflections on The Huffington Post and VividLife.


 


This fall, Sounds True is publishing a box set of teaching conversations based on the poems in my book Reduced to Joy. The poems are the teachers and unfold the journey from our head to our heart. For the next two months, I’m happy to be previewing poems and reflections from the box set.


This poem speaks to the proper role of guides and what they open us to. You’ll notice that the voice of this poem is imperative, that is, it offers instruction to the reader. I must confess that when poems appear in this voice, it is not me giving instructions to you, but more, I am receiving instructions from the voice of life and simply recording them. I am the you in the poem, too. What the poem offers is for me to learn as well.


 


The Water Takes Many Forms


 


When people are at a loss, the guide ferries them over.


When one is (awake), one ferries oneself.


—Hui-Neng


 


Listen for guides, but use their wisdom as you


would a lamp to read your own heart. If some-


one dissuades you from your heart, they are not


a guide. A guide, like a ferryman, brings you


close to the water, will even help you cross,


but it’s your own thirst that makes you cry


stop, wait—so you can drink.


 


When drinking of that water, it’s clear:


the taste of birth we long to keep alive grows


inside everything. In the sheerness of the


water once it stops moving. In the surrender


of exhaustion that loosens every grip. In the


peace within our loneliness once we stop


gnawing at what might have been.


 


When drinking of that peace, it’s clear:


doubt leads to humility, the way thirst makes


us drink. And pain drops into Oneness, the


way hunger makes us eat.


 


When finding a guide, listen, if you must, to


what they have to say, but look for the water


in their eyes and the wind that rims their


voice. Let your self be scoured back to the


beginning which is not behind us,


but about to crack open within us.


 


 


A Question to Walk With: Tell the story of a mentor or guide and how they have led you to your own inner guide.

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Published on June 23, 2014 10:01
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